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Jul 02 2025TECHNOLOGY

How Long Can a Tesla EV Battery Hold Its Charge?

Tesla's electric vehicles (EVs) rely on lithium-ion batteries, which are common in most EVs today. These batteries are powerful and efficient, but they aren't perfect. They can lose charge even when the car isn't being used. This is called discharge. There are two main types of lithium-ion batterie

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Jul 02 2025HEALTH

How Brain Swelling Affects Cancer Treatment Success

Brain cancer is tough to beat. Doctors use special tools to fight it. One tool is stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). It zaps cancer with precise radiation. But sometimes, the brain swells around the tumor. This swelling is called perilesional edema (PLE). Does PLE make the treatment less effective? R

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Jul 02 2025HEALTH

How Tired Docs Write: A Tech Take

Doctors jotting down notes after seeing patients might not just be recording medical details. These notes could also hint at something else: how tired the doctor is. A recent study dug into this idea using a whopping 129, 228 emergency room visits. The goal? To train a computer model to spot notes w

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Jul 02 2025BUSINESS

How Employee Stock Ownership Plans Shape Company Success

In the fast-paced world of smart manufacturing, companies are always looking for ways to boost performance and keep their employees motivated. One popular strategy is Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs), which give workers a stake in the company's future. But how exactly do ESOPs affect a company

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Jul 02 2025HEALTH

Unraveling the Links: Genes, Lifestyle, and Two Tough Health Conditions

Psoriasis and Crohn's disease often show up together. But why? Scientists are trying to figure out if genes or lifestyle choices play a bigger role. First, let's talk about genes. They can influence whether someone gets these diseases. But genes aren't the whole story. Lifestyle matters too. Things

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Jul 02 2025SCIENCE

Youth Behavior: A Changing Landscape Over Time

Over the past 15 years, the behavior of young people has shifted in interesting ways. Researchers wanted to understand how often young people acted out and what caused these actions. They studied twins from different backgrounds and found that bad behavior decreased until 2019, but then increased a

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Jul 02 2025SCIENCE

How Rain Affects Wastewater Treatment

A big plant that cleans water, called an aerobic granular sludge (AGS) plant, is really good at taking out nutrients and organic stuff. But what about tiny pollutants, like medicine and chemicals? That's what scientists wanted to find out. They looked at 19 medicines and 2 industrial chemicals in th

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Jul 02 2025SCIENCE

Unlocking the Secrets of Stuttering in Japanese Speakers

Stuttering is complex. It doesn't happen the same way for everyone. In many languages, people who stutter often struggle more with words that start with consonants. But in Japanese, it's different. Many Japanese speakers who stutter find vowel-starting words harder to say. A recent study dug into t

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Jul 02 2025EDUCATION

Asking Better Questions in the AI Age

In the coming years, as artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more common, the way we ask questions will need to change. This shift is not just about technology. It's about how we think and solve problems. Leaders and teachers will have to come up with new questions they haven't thought of before. A

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Jul 02 2025SPORTS

UPenn Changes Sports Rules: What It Means for Transgender Athletes

The University of Pennsylvania has made some big changes to its sports policies. They will no longer allow transgender athletes to compete on women's teams. This decision comes after an agreement with the federal government. The school will also erase the records set by Lia Thomas, a transgender swi

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